1 / 21

Constitutional Convention

Constitutional Convention. Members Principles Agreements and compromises. Members. 55 delegates White Males Statesmen, lawyers, planters. bankers, businessmen Most under age 50. Absent . John Adams- ambassador to England Thomas Jefferson- ambassador to France

talon
Download Presentation

Constitutional Convention

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Constitutional Convention Members Principles Agreements and compromises

  2. Members • 55 delegates • White • Males • Statesmen, lawyers, planters. bankers, businessmen • Most under age 50

  3. Absent • John Adams- ambassador to England • Thomas Jefferson- ambassador to France • Patrick Henry- “smelled a rat” • Sam Adams- not chosen by state to be part of the delegation

  4. Famous Members • Alexander Hamilton- leader of strong government • George Washington- chairman of the convention • James Madison- ‘father of the Constitution’ • Benjamin Franklin- oldest member at 81 was also at the 2nd Continental Congress

  5. Principles of the Constitution • Checks and Balances- A political system in which branches of government have some authority over the actions of the other branches • Limited Government- the idea that government is not all powerful, but can only do what the people allow it to.

  6. Principles of the Constitution • Federalism- the division of power between a central government and states • National level • State level • Local level

  7. Principles of the Constitution • Popular Sovereignty- the people rule. The power of the government is based on the consent of the governed. • Separation of powers- the division of the government into three separate branches: executive, legislative, and judicial.

  8. Agreements and Compromises • All agreed that rights to property should be protected. • Ben Franklin proposed universal suffrage for all males, but most wanted only those with land to vote • Most delegates favored a bicameral legislature

  9. Agreements and Compromises • Virginia Plan- favored by large states • Proposed by James Randolph • Written by James Madison • Endorsed by Alexander Hamilton • government with a bicameral legislature • Large house elected by popular vote • Smaller house chosen by lager house members from nominees chosen by state legislatures • Number of Representatives based on wealth

  10. Agreements and Compromises • New Jersey Plan- favored by small states • Proposed by William Paterson • Unicameral house • Each state one vote • Did not require a strong central government

  11. The Great Compromise • Aka: Connecticut Compromise • Bicameral house- benefit all states • One house called Senate • Members chosen by the state legislatures • Each state gets one vote • One house called House of Representatives • Members chosen by population • Number of members based on population

  12. Agreements and Compromises • Three-fifths clause • favors Southern states • All slaves would be counted in the census for representation in the House as 3/5ths

  13. Agreements and Compromises • Electoral College • People chosen by the state legislatures • Vote for president and vice-president • Supposed to reflect the will of the people

  14. Agreements and Compromises • Slave and trade compromise • Benefits both North and South • No taxes on exports • No interference with the slave trade for 20 years

  15. Agreements and Compromises • Amendment compromise • 2/3 vote of each house of Congress and ratified by ¾ of the state legislatures • 2/3 vote of both houses and ratified by state conventions of ¾ of the states (used 21st amendment)

  16. Agreements and Compromises • Proposed by a national constitutional convention requested by 2/3 state legislatures and ratified by ¾ state legislatures (never used) • Proposed by the national constitutional convention and ratified by ¾ of the specially formed state conventions

  17. Agreements and Compromises • Informal Amendments- broad language allows for interpretation as things and events change our country • Legislature- Commerce clause (art. 1 sec. 8) • Legislation dealing with technology not even thought of when the Constitution was written.

  18. Agreements and Compromises • Executive – • Presidents make executive agreements with other countries. • Not a delegated power • Do not have to be ratified by the Senate

  19. Agreements and Compromises • Judicial- • Judicial review- the power of the court to interpret the Constitution • Judicial power to determine if a law is unconstitutional

  20. Criticism of Founders • Beard’s criticism: • Founders interested in protecting property- their own • All agreements based on their own economic welfare • Most scholars determine that the criticism is false because the voting did not follow their own interests but those of their state

  21. Criticism of Constitution • Does not protect the rights of the individual • Does not protect states rights • Gives a central authority too much power

More Related